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Why you shouldn’t vote for Netanyahu’s interests


Benjamin Netanyahu went to Cheltenham High School outside Philadelphia, got an MBA at MIT, and a job at Boston Consulting Group, where he made friends with Mitt Romney. The ambitious young Israeli is said to have considered staying in America, obtaining citizenship, and changing his name to Ben Natan.

He returned instead to Israel to lead an anti-terrorism group and go into politics.

Had he remained in the United States it is quite likely he’d have followed a political path as well and run for office, but not president since he wasn’t born here. That hasn’t stopped him from dabbling in presidential politics for many years, mainly Republican. It was most notable in 2012 when he boosted his old colleague, Romney, motivated as much by friendship as antagonism toward Barack Obama.

In the three presidential elections since then, Netanyahu has been backing Donald Trump. They may not share the collegiality of Bibi and Mitt, but rather are driven by ruthlessness, ambition, and ego. 

There are distinct differences between Trump and Netanyahu. The disgraced former president describes himself as “a really smart person,” but isn’t one; the Israeli prime minister is. One of Bibi’s MIT professors called him “very bright” and said, “he did superbly.” At Wharton, Prog. Willam T. Kelly said, “Donald Trump was the dumbest goddam student I ever had.”

The Israeli leader also speaks better English, has a more sophisticated vocabulary, and actually wrote the books that list him as the author. Bibi has military, diplomatic, and governing experience; Trump is a draft dodger with none of that. 

President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem on May 23, 2017. (credit: RONEN ZVULUN/REUTERS)

Reasons to vote against Trump

If Bibi could vote in next month’s presidential election, he’d vote for Trump, but you shouldn’t. Here are some reasons:

Netanyahu, the self-styled defender of world Jewry who is so quick to see antisemitism behind all criticism of Israel, seems unfazed by Trump’s history of antisemitism, notably accusations of dual loyalty and threats to hold Jews responsible if he loses the election. Retribution has been a theme of Trump’s campaign, and don’t expect a Jewish dispensation. 

Conservative columnist Mona Charen suggested Trump’s threat was intended to “frighten Jewish voters” to fear that “if they failed to support him, he might encourage his disappointed and enraged followers to direct their fury at the nearest Jew.” 

Both men are secular yet portray themselves as pious while questioning the faith of their opposition. Trump told a conservative Christian group that Democrats are “against religion.” Bibi notoriously whispered in the ear of an old rabbi that the Left had “forgotten what it is to be Jews.”


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Trust is essential for national leaders. Two of Netanyahu’s predecessors from opposite ends of the political spectrum, Yitzhak Shamir of Likud and Labor’s Shimon Peres, agreed on one thing. Netanyahu is not “trustworthy” (Shamir), and his “only consideration” is holding on to power (Peres).

How can either man swear to uphold the law when one, Trump, has a whole slew of impeachments, convictions, indictments, suits, and verdicts on his rap sheet, and the other is currently on trial for fraud, breach of trust, and bribery?

They also share a desire to stay out of prison, and holding office seems to be their escape route. Trump intends to weaponize the Justice Department, something he falsely accuses President Joe Biden of doing, in pursuit of his enemies, critics, and anyone else who displeases him. If president, he will likely have all federal charges dropped. Bibi is pushing legislation to end his country’s independent judiciary and drop his charges.

Another common thread is their admiration of autocrats and aspirations to join their ranks. Gen. Mark Milley, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has called Trump a “fascist to the core.”

Trump is an admirer of Russian President Vladimir Putin who, along with Netanyahu, wants the Republican to return to the White House. Each man is confident that Trump wouldn’t try to stop the wars they’re waging or block their plans to seize their respective neighbors’ land.

While Biden is urging Netanyahu not to target Iran’s nuclear facilities in retaliation for Tehran’s recent missile attacks on Israel, Trump is urging him to “hit the nuclear first and worry about the rest later.” 

Mega-donor Miriam Adelson is putting about $100 million into Trump’s campaign and is demanding he support Israeli annexation of…



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